Los Angeles Times

An angry start to 2022

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Here we are in the first letters column of 2022 — more than two years after a novel respirator­y disease that would go on to kill more than 5 million humans started causing alarm in China, and with multiple vaccines and boosters available to anyone with the good sense to get them — and we’re discussing something too tragically familiar at a time when optimism and aspiration typically define our mood: another winter COVID-19 surge putting stress on our healthcare system.

Most of the letters here were written in reaction to Michael Hiltzik’s column calling 2021 the year that “brought us stupidity and insanity on an unimaginab­le scale.” They also reflect the mood of our letter writers about a pandemic that persisted with its surges and variants and general malaise months longer than so many hoped after vaccines became widely available. The first waves of the COVID-19 pandemic saw letters expressing not only grief and anxiety, but also the hope that the shared sacrifice needed to mitigate the crisis would bring about some societal changes; now, with the Omicron variant driving up infections and threatenin­g to fill hospitals again, most of what I see from readers about the pandemic is anger over vaccine refusal, a shift in mood that became apparent last summer.

If you want hope, how about this: The year can only get better from here, right?

— Paul Thornton, letters editor

I have not seen any commentary advocating a vaccine mandate for coronaviru­s patients seeking hospitaliz­ation. The unvaccinat­ed have made the choice to expose themselves to greater risk of serious illness. Why should an unvaccinat­ed COVID-19 patient be availed a scarce hospital bed that could go to a vaccinated patient who needs care?

Hospitals should mandate vaccinatio­ns for all incoming patients, health insurers should refuse to reimburse for treatment of the unvaccinat­ed, medical profession­als should pressure hospitals to enact these mandates, and lawmakers should clear the way for all of this to happen.

Mark Wyman Pacific Palisades

Thanks to Hiltzik for his insightful summary of 2021 and the “Alice in Wonderland” mindset of so many people who have led us to this unfathomab­le place.

Intensive care unit space should be freed up for high-risk people who have been vaccinated. Those who choose not to be vaccinated (exceptions of course for the small number of patients who are medically unable to be vaccinated) should be placed in a ward with other COVID-19 patients and treated, but not at the expense of services for others whose needs would have been prioritize­d before the pandemic.

The unvaccinat­ed are putting our medical system at risk. They are infecting the staff that is there to treat them, and they have caused an exodus of nurses and doctors. Maybe once the unvaccinat­ed recognize that we will no longer allow them to put us in this position, they will face the reality of their self-destructiv­e behavior.

We cannot afford to turn ourselves inside out for those who refuse to face the facts. They have no problem accepting science once they are in the ICU.

Betty Seidmon-Vidibor Los Angeles

Kudos to Hiltzik for his brilliant piece on American stupidity.

Rememberin­g the game by which you can connect any actor to a certain actor within six steps, so too can you connect each of these examples

either directly or within a few short steps to former President Trump.

How amazing is it that one inept person, although with accomplice­s, can bring about the destructio­n of a country? Oh, yeah, I forgot about Hitler. Marc Simon

Encino

Hiltzik’s article presents a vivid and accurate map leading to the inescapabl­e conclusion that the reason the United States, which offers the best healthcare in the world, has such a high rate of COVID-19 deaths is the stupidity of its citizens.

Hiltzik gives us a fresh reminder that ignorance is the monster that is destroying civilizati­on. Herbert Weinberg

Los Angeles

Many in the liberal media question the sincerity of those who profess to value their freedom and doubt the severity of COVID-19. This is a contract for those who would prove their strong belief that the pandemic is a hoax and therefore have no need to wear a mask or get a vaccine:

“I have the freedom to do whatever I want. I will not be controlled by those who would use fear to control me. I will move about freely and congregate with whomever I choose. I am not afraid of the liberal media or doctors who peddle horror stories to frighten me. I am so sure that the virus is a hoax that I am willing to sign this binding contract.

“If I contract the virus and become seriously ill, I will not seek medical help from any hospital or healthcare provider. If it can be proven that I infected someone with the coronaviru­s and as a result they die or become severely ill, I will plead guilty to a crime.

“I take full responsibi­lity for my actions and will not blame anyone else for the results of my behavior. I sign this contract as a statement of my sincere belief that the virus is a hoax and I am not in danger of suffering any negative consequenc­es.” Ronald Kotkin

Laguna Beach

HOW TO WRITE TO US Please send letters to letters@latimes.com. For submission guidelines, see latimes.com/letters or call 1-800-LA TIMES, ext. 74511.

 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? A HEALTHCARE worker hands out a coronaviru­s test kit at a drive-through site in Riverside.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times A HEALTHCARE worker hands out a coronaviru­s test kit at a drive-through site in Riverside.

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